HolyCoast: Learning to Love the Bomb
Follow RickMoore on Twitter

Friday, August 06, 2010

Learning to Love the Bomb

For those history revisionists out there here's a reminder of why it's not necessary to apologize to the Japanese for using atomic weapons to end the war:
1) The A-bomb Shut Down WWII

It's not necessary to reopen the perennial argument as to whether the atomic bombings were necessary to defeat Japan to acknowledge that they brought the war to an abrupt halt. On August 6, it was going strong. By August 14, it was over.

WWII had been in progress for six years (closer to eleven, if you were Chinese). It had killed something on the order of 65 million people, a bloodletting unmatched in recorded history. Killing was still going on throughout the territory still occupied by Japan. As August 1945 began, people were dying at the rate of 20,000 a week.

There was no sign that it would stop any time soon. The Japanese refusal to surrender is a historical fact. Their commitment to fight to the last drop of blood is undeniable. (Anyone who doubts this is advised to read Something Like an Autobiography, the memoirs of the master filmmaker Akira Kurosawa, who was told, along with all other Japanese, that when the U.S. invasion came, they were to march to the sea and fling themselves on the advancing troops in the "honorable death of the hundred million." Kurosawa loathed Japanese imperialism. He hated the militarists. He was sick of the war. But still, he said, "I probably would have gone.")

The atomic bombs ended this -- not through destructiveness (the March incendiary raids against Tokyo killed more people than Hiroshima and Nagasaki combined), but by shock. The Japanese military was in the midst of explaining to Emperor Hirohito why the U.S. could have built no more than one bomb when word of the Nagasaki strike arrived. "How many bombs did you say there were?" the emperor reportedly asked.

In the stunned silence following the atomic raids, the voice of reason could be heard at last. No other weapon could have accomplished this.
The American Thinker piece gives nine more reasons why nuclear weapons have been good for keeping the world a relatively peaceful place.  Disarming America, as Obama and his cronies would like to do, would simply make the world a much more dangerous place for all of us.

The New York Post also opines on the subject of an apology to Japan.  Hiroshima: No Apology Needed

2 comments:

Mr. Richard said...

If any APOLOGY is needed it would be from those in Japan who started World War II by the sneak attack on the U.S.A. at Pearl Harbor. The U.S.A. does NOT owe any type of apology to Japan.

Nightingale said...

You don't hear much about the Bataan Death March by these revisionists.